No GPS here, but a huge range of Ordnance Survey maps on the shelves. US members may not have had experience of these (when I visited the US I could find nothing similar). Pretty much every nook and cranny of our little group of islands is mapped in extraordinary detail at scales of commonly 1 1/4" to the mile and 2 1/2" to the mile, but also 6" and 25" (sorry, I don't do metric!) The 2 1/2" (Outdoor Leisure) maps are wonderful, and poring over them before heading off somewhere will reveal features such as "railway line disused", "bronze age burial mound", "cave", "ruins of church", and so on.
As for music, I haven't yet had a CD player in a car, still on compact cassettes, which serve me very well. Reliability issues of 30+ years ago seem to have been sorted with better tapes and better players. I'd never get rid of my vast collection of mainly big band/jazz LPs, though I do buy CDs when new material is issued (and record it on cassette for the car!) Only just ditched the CRT TV set when it died. Its LED replacement is nowhere near as good, thanks largely to the crude digital TV signals that have been wished on us in place of our previous excellent wideband fm signal.
No iPhone/Smart phone, not even a camera on the crappy old mobile phone I use (occasionally). No Kindle, no laptop computer, no X-box (why would anyone want one?). Reluctantly, I have a car with electronic ignition, though I don't trust the stuff and also have a car with points and a condenser so that I can adjust the gap when I feel the urge.
Yet I work in the field of technology..... I think I've become cynical over the years and now regard many technological 'advances' as being change for change's sake. I refuse to buy in to the concept of technology with built-in obsolescence. I also like to use technologies and equipment which I can a) understand and b) fix myself.
So instead of spending my money on technology and 'automation' such as a dishwasher, I've built up a fine collection of tools and equipment with which to make and mend things (including cameras, of course), and a neat lathe. I also have a library of books that gives me a lot of pleasure, though I'll be dead before I've read them all!
Best wishes,
Steve